Some time ago I posted the following query:
>Hebrew, German and Italian have the stop [t], the fricative [s] and the
>affricate [ts]. Greek has all of these and also the fricative [T] (i.e.
>'theta'), but it does not have an affricate [tT]. (English, Castillian and
>Arabic have [t], [s] and [T], but neither [ts] nor [tT]). Does anyone know of
>languages having a [tT] affricate? More generally, [pT], [tT], [kT], etc.
>affricates? (To clarify, by affricates I mean real affricates that pass tests
>of single-segmenthood, not accidental adjacencies such as [p] [T] in the
>English word "depth".) If there is such a language, does it distinguish between
>such affricates and [ps], [ts], [ks], respectively?
I have received kind responses from: (in alphabetical order)
Brad Coon, Lance Eccles, Dirk Elzinga, Blaine Erickson, Alice Faber,
Johannes Heinecke, John Kingston, John Koontz, John Lawler, Wen-Chao Li,
Stavros Macrakis, Geoff Nathan, Marc Picard, Don Ringe and David Stampe
I am grateful to all of these individuals.
A number of them indicated that [ps], [ks], [pT] or [kT] are not affricates at
all as their stops are not homorganic with their fricatives. Once this point
has been clarified, we can focus only on [tT]. The answer is a clear "yes":
1. The Athapaskan language Chipewyan (Lawler, Nathan, Picard, Ringe, Stampe)
has all of [tT], [ts], [tS] and [tl] as single segments, each with ejective and
aspirated variants. Other Athapaskan languages having (at least) [tT] include
Tahltan (Kingston) and Kutchin (Picard). Some relevant references:
Krauss & Golla (1981) Northern Athapaskan Languages (in Handbook of North
American Indians)
John Laver (1994): Principles of Phonetics.
Fang-Kuei Li (1946): Chipewyan (in Linguistic Structures of Native America).
Ian Maddieson: Sounds of the World's Languages.
2. The Nuorese dialect of the Romance Sardinian (Eccles) has (or at least had)
[tT]. E.g. [pratTa] - small square vs. [pratta] - money. References:
Ugo Pellis (1933-4): 50 inchieste linguistiche in Sardegna (in BALI).
Massimo Pittau (1972): Grammatica del sardo-nuorese: il piu conservativo dei
parlari neolatini.
3. The Montasik dialect of the Austronesian Acehnese (Lawler) has a phonemic
[tT] ("s" in standard orthography). References:
M. Durie (1985): A Grammar of Acehnese on the Basis of a Dialect of North Aceh.
J. Lawler (1977): A Agrees with B in Achenese: A Problem for RG (in S&S 8).
4. Many Chinese dialects (Li) have [tT]. Most of these are rural ones which
have been documented only since the early eighties in specialist dialectology
journals written in Chinese and not widely circulated.
5. Several Salishan languages, particularly Saanich (Coon -- "reasonably
certain") have [tT].
6. Western dialects of the Uzo-Aztecan language Shoshoni (Elzinga) have the
affricate [tT]. It is a single phonological unit and patterns with the
other stops (p,t,k,kw) in lenition and mutation processes.
7. Modern Greek (Macrakis) has [tT] and [pP], e.g. /matTeos/ (Matthew), /sapPo/
(Sappho), but these are accidental adjacencies, i.e. not single segments.
I have found an answer to my question. Thanks again to all contributors.
Daniel Radzinski
Tovna Translation Machines
Jerusalem, Israel
drtovna.co.il

I asked after the etymology of the Russian word for "nine", which is
(in transcription) {dev'at'}. I was curious about how this could be
derived from the Indoeuropean, more faithfully preserved in Latin
/nowem/. Many thanks to all who responded. Almost all respondents
gave some version of the same answer, which I will summarize for the
curious.
{dev'at'} is indeed from the IE, but the initial n- has been levelled
to d- in analogy with the word for "ten", {des'at'}. (In the Germanic
languages, a similar thing happened to "four" and "five"; if "four"
had evolved "naturally", it would now be *"whour". One respondent
also noted similar "crosstalk" in some Japanese speakers between the
words for 7 and 8.) The analogy with "ten" might have occurred in
Proto-Balto-Slavic, since Lithuanian has {devyni}, {deSimt}. But here
the evidence is mixed, since Old Prussian (Baltic) retains n.
The IE for "nine" was perhaps *newm (although one respondent says
there is evidence for *Hnewn, where the H is the first laryngeal).
The -tI suffix that appears on 9 and 10 in Old Slavic is apparently an
ordinal suffix plus a declension marker that turns the word back into
a noun. (The result might be glossed as something like "ninthness".)
A couple of repondents corrected my misimpression about "eight"
{vos'em'}. It too may be derived in regular fashion from IE.
One informant referred me to Jadranka Gvozdanovic, ed., The
Indo-European Numerals, Mouton de Gruyter, Berlin, 1992.
I have not associated respondents with their individual contributions,
to avoid inadvertently ascribing errors in my own paraphrases to them.
Thanks again to all of them. (I fear I have deleted one name
irrecoverably with an editing error; my apologies to the uncredited
respondent.)
"Larry Trask" <larrytcogs.susx.ac.uk>
"Evan S. Smith" <smitheExt.Missouri.edu>
Mike Hammond <hammondconvx1.ccit.arizona.edu>
nostlercrl.nmsu.edu (Nick Ostler)
(Schneider-Zioga) pschneidscf.usc.edu
robert westmoreland <rwestmorsilver.ucs.indiana.edu>
"Margaret E. Winters" <GA3704SIUCVMB.SIU.EDU>
johannauclink.berkeley.edu (Johanna Nichols)
Don Ringe <dringeunagi.cis.upenn.edu>
Ivan A Derzhanski <iadcogsci.edinburgh.ac.uk>
Bernard Comrie <comriebcf.usc.edu>